eliminate vicious power
As a Chinese idiom, CH ú C á NQ ù Hu ì in pinyin means to eliminate the cruel and decadent forces in society. It comes from the annals of the Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Can: brutality. Filth: filth, a metaphor for evil forces.
The origin of Idioms
"So in Jinan, we began to get rid of the deformities and eliminate the filth, and elected peacefully, which disobeyed the common treatment."
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym for removing the old and putting in the new
Idiom usage
To change completely. example it should be popular in the world to eliminate the deformity and impurity of the Han family. According to Chen Shou's biography of Zhou Yu in the history of the Three Kingdoms and Fan Ye's biography of Liang Tong in the later Han Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty, benevolent people love each other, righteous people govern, love people's affairs are to eliminate the disabled, and political principles are to eliminate the disorder The battle of Chibi, Volume 65 of Sima Guang's Zi Zhi Tong Jian in the Northern Song Dynasty, said: "we should go all over the world and get rid of the deformities and filth for the Han family."
Chinese PinYin : chú cán qù huì
eliminate vicious power
a wife lifts the tray to a level with her eyebrows to show great respect for her husband. jǔ àn qí méi
a fish leaping over the dragon gate -- have passed a competitive examination. yú yuè lóng mén
Heavy mountains and heavy waters. chóng shān fù shuǐ